I was just coming to the same conclusion based on the discussion on another thread. I 
was just thinking that the strength of most research methods courses is in designing 
an internally and externally valid study but there is really little training (other 
than about not drawing causal conlusions from a correlational study) about how to 
logically design studies to test theory or how to build theory on the basis of study 
design. I wonder if anyone has had any success in Research Methods in developing 
theory-building skills. Maybe this is a topic I should devote more time to in the 
Advanced Research Seminar. Could we get help here from the study of logic and 
philosophy? Any ideas?

Rick

Dr. Rick Froman
Associate Professor of Psychology
John Brown University
Siloam Springs, AR  72761
(479) 524-7295
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
web: http://www.jbu.edu/academics/sbs/rfroman.asp


-----Original Message-----
From: David B. Daniel, Ph.D. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, February 10, 2003 8:44 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences
Subject: Re: Would anyone here write a letter of recommendation Carl
Jung ?


And another thing:

Some of the great theorists of our time would not have a voice in our
current system.  In my field, developmental, we have come from too much
unsubstantiated theory to too much disconnected data.  We now have a wealth
of studies that are not being tied together in any meaningful theoretical
fashion.   While integrating research findings into theoretical explanations
is a big part of science, attempts to provide such theories are now actively
discouraged.  

There is a place for people like Jung, Judith Rich Harris, and others who
push us to test our assumptions and develop points of view other than our
current ones.  We can test the assertions, adapt the assertions, or discount
them all together.  But, a science replete with description but without
theory, and grand theory in particular, becomes disconnected from its source
and, ultimately, of limited explanatory utility.

Happy Monday!

David
 

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             (o o) 
 --------oOOo-(_)-oOOo----------------

David B. Daniel, Ph.D.
Department of Psychology                Associate Research Scientist
University of Maine at Farmington       New England Research Institutes
234 Main Street
Farmington, ME   04938
207-778-7411
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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